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Posts Tagged ‘full moon’

A Moon Full

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 77 Comments › )
Filed under Art, Astronomy, Humor, OOT, Open thread at February 24th, 2013 - 11:00 pm

Full Moon

Posted by: qwertymkonji

Maybe this is related to the sun spot solar cycle? Maybe different magnitudes of “disturbance” (ala torsion field effect and electromagnetism) have something to do with it as well.

Hmmmmm

Posted by: Jenny

my cat has been acting weird and I looked at the sky and saw that it was a full moon so I looked this up And read that they could get hurt.
First he was at the door meowing so I let him out I thought it was a animal but there was no animal near.He is still at the door meowing five min. later And he bit me but he hasn’t bit me in two years.

Posted by: Amy

My dog was acting crazy last night…really hyperactive.

I checked today and it was a full moon last night, then I looked this up.

I will certainly keep an eye on him now around the time of a full moon as he has epilepsy and I dont want him to do anything that could trigger a fit.

Posted by: Irene

God,I was walking my dog,and we sat ’cause i really really wanted to watch the moon(have some kind of addict) ,and my dog suddenly turned around to the moon(it’s full moon)..His eyes started to sparkle,and the thing that freaked the sh*t out of me – he started to nod to the moon . After that he was looking at me strange..
I do not understand.That have never happened before.

Image (with comments posted verbatim) from here. Now get down on all fours, drop your haunches, raise your muzzles and howl all you want to on
The Overnight Open Thread.

Full Moon

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 124 Comments › )
Filed under Astronomy, Humor, OOT, Science, Space Exploration, Technology at December 27th, 2012 - 10:00 pm


[via]
For some, it’s nothing but a big sandbox in the sky. As for the rest of us, it’s another cheesy excuse for The Overnight Open Thread.

Saturday Lecture Series: Full Moon at Perigee Tonight

by coldwarrior ( 85 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Astronomy, Open thread, saturday lecture series, Science at March 19th, 2011 - 8:30 am

Good Morning all, today’s lecture covers some simple planetary mechanics and some great timing.

 

Terms:

perigee: point nearest to orbited object: the point in the orbit of a satellite, moon, or planet at which it comes nearest to the object it is orbiting [ Late 16th century. Via French < late Greek perigeion < perigeios “close round the earth” < Greek peri “around” + “earth” ]

apogee: point in orbit farthest from Earth: the point at which a satellite orbiting an astronomical object is farthest from the center of the object being orbited [ Late 16th century. < French < Greek apogaios “away from the Earth” < gaia “Earth” ]

 

From NASA:

 

 

Tonight, the full moon will be practically at perigee (off by one hour). The moon has two points for perigee and two points for apogee in each rotation around the Earth each 27.3 hours.

 

The Moon orbits the Earth in an ellipse with an eccentricity of about 0.05 where 0 is a perfect circle and 1.0 is a parabola. 0.05 equates to a perigee point that is 23,000 miles closer than apogee. Or, a 14% larger moon with 30% more brightness tonight.

 

 

From our Friends at NASA:

 

Super Full Moon:

March 16, 2011: Mark your calendar. On March 19th, a full Moon of rare size and beauty will rise in the east at sunset. It’s a super “perigee moon”–the biggest in almost 20 years.

“The last full Moon so big and close to Earth occurred in March of 1993,” says Geoff Chester of the US Naval Observatory in Washington DC. “I’d say it’s worth a look.”

Full Moons vary in size because of the oval shape of the Moon’s orbit. It is an ellipse with one side (perigee) about 50,000 km closer to Earth than the other (apogee): diagram. Nearby perigee moons are about 14% bigger and 30% brighter than lesser moons that occur on the apogee side of the Moon’s orbit.

Super Full Moon (movie strip, 550px) 

Above: Perigee moons are as much as 14% wider and 30% brighter than lesser full Moons. [video]

“The full Moon of March 19th occurs less than one hour away from perigee–a near-perfect coincidence1 that happens only 18 years or so,” adds Chester.

A perigee full Moon brings with it extra-high “perigean tides,” but this is nothing to worry about, according to NOAA. In most places, lunar gravity at perigee pulls tide waters only a few centimeters (an inch or so) higher than usual. Local geography can amplify the effect to about 15 centimeters (six inches)–not exactly a great flood.

Super Full Moon (moon illusion, 200px) 

The Moon looks extra-big when it is beaming through foreground objects–a.k.a. “the Moon illusion.”

Indeed, contrary to some reports circulating the Internet, perigee Moons do not trigger natural disasters. The “super moon” of March 1983, for instance, passed without incident. And an almost-super Moon in Dec. 2008 also proved harmless.

Okay, the Moon is 14% bigger than usual, but can you really tell the difference? It’s tricky. There are no rulers floating in the sky to measure lunar diameters. Hanging high overhead with no reference points to provide a sense of scale, one full Moon can seem much like any other.

The best time to look is when the Moon is near the horizon. That is when illusion mixes with reality to produce a truly stunning view. For reasons not fully understood by astronomers or psychologists, low-hanging Moons look unnaturally large when they beam through trees, buildings and other foreground objects. On March 19th, why not let the “Moon illusion” amplify a full Moon that’s extra-big to begin with? The swollen orb rising in the east at sunset may seem so nearby, you can almost reach out and touch it.

Don’t bother. Even a super perigee Moon is still 356,577 km away. That is, it turns out, a distance of rare beauty.

See the ScienceCast of this story on YouTube at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r1yalg_Apdw
Author: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA

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So, if you are going to have some clear skies, it would be worth it to go outside tonight and get a glimpse of that perigee full moon. The full Moon rises at 1953L in the East.